cyclical symphonies of a people transferred symphonies of a people transferred joan hubert...
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Cyclical Symphonies of a People Transferred
Joan Hubert
INTRODUCTION
Teaching choral music in the high school setting can be both challenging and rewarding.
It can make a teacher sometimes fall to dismal depths of disappointment and sometimes
soar to stratospheric summits of success. The teacher can have great ideas, enthusiasm
and educational techniques but until you reach that certain “something” in a student’s
mind and heart that makes that student want to sing with beauty and clarity of tone, the
music of the “masters,” the task becomes a most daunting one, and it turns into a battle of
the wills. Oftentimes, the teacher is competing with music of today’s art world, which is
more rhythmic than melodic. The appeal to teenagers is one of an almost hypnotic
intensity that seeks to unleash the pent-up primal energies that lead to the re-enactment of
the dances of our ancestors.
The purpose of the choral music program is to identify a student’s creative ability in
the vocal music class and then through education, supervised and independent practice
coupled with practical application in performance, the student will form permanent
connections to the art of singing. The choral music program includes the study of vocal
music techniques, repertoire preparation for solo and small or large ensembles, and it
allows the student the opportunity to exhibit their mastery of the objectives that are
included in the curriculum. This program also provides for the inclusion of the study of
music history and literature and music theory.
The music history and literature curriculum ties the study of music to the study of
parallel or related events in world history and the study of historical events in specific
places on the globe. These objectives can be found in the Houston Independent School
District document entitled Project CLEAR (Clarifying Learning to Enhance Achievement
Results). This document contains the foundation upon which the goals for the Fine Arts
Program are based. These goals are called the “Required Objectives and Correlations,”
and form the instructional curriculum base for teaching the fine arts. These objectives
allow for the identification of a student’s creative abilities and the performance of these
abilities and talents. It also allows teachers to lead in the study of historical and cultural
events of the past and present which may have an impact and influence on the student’s
understanding of the objectives and in that student’s level of performance in using that
talent.
The composer Cesar Franck (1822 – 1890) is generally credited with the
establishment of the musical technique called “cyclic form,” which is defined as a
composition that incorporates the same musical theme throughout all or most of the
movements of that composition. He was a Belgian-born French composer. Cyclic form is
related to any work that contains several movements, as in a suite, symphony, sonata or
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string quartet. Other composers who used this form were Liszt, Rachmaninov, Brahms,
Bruckner, and Elgar. The composition often closes with a repetition of the theme from
the beginning of the piece or composition. The form was “born” during the nineteenth or
twentieth century (Sadie, 1980). The symphony first appeared in the late sixteenth
century, and it meant that this was music for an ensemble. It had a fast – slow – fast
series of passages, and it was composed in three movements (Sadie, 1980). The word
“transferred” is defined as a person or thing that has been displaced, shifted, changed, or
removed from one place to another. It could also mean to be leased, sold, or deeded to
another person. The transformation, in music, means to alter a theme or to change its
character but to maintain its own identity (Sadie, 1980).
I believe that these words appropriately explain the intent of this musical resource
study guide. This resource guide is intended to be revised, updated and have changes
added by the reader, which will be needed to clarify information to be taught or to allow
for dissemination of information that has been recently discovered or is determined to be
a necessary entity in the course of study. There are opportunities for the student to enjoy
personal experiences involving the subject matter to be taught. These personal
experiences should involve opportunities for self-discovery of theories, self-evaluation of
information learned, individual interaction/involvement in the learning process and
opportunities to expand the information into more academically challenging studies of
that which has been included here. There can be individual modifications made, based on
a student’s academic level or ethnic or cultural background.
Therefore, I begin to build my lessons around the theme “Cyclical Symphonies of a
People Transferred.” This is the study of the music and people of America’s and Texas’
past as it is related to the music and people of the city of Houston. Let us explore the
musical influences of American Indians, the Indians of Texas, the German people who
transferred to Texas, and the African Americans who were transferred to America and to
Texas, as we study the performing world of Houston. There will be discussions about
professional and amateur performing organizations that provide the population of
Houston with entertainment representative of various ethnic groups and cultures.
THE MUSIC OF AMERICA’S HEART
America’s heart beats with a cacophony of rhythms and pulses, weaving a bewitching
swirl of movement that entices one to move and sway with each strike of a mallet. She
sings with melodies as beautiful as the songs of the birds of the air. Her harmonies are as
the sound of many rushing waters as they go on their timeless way towards the sea. The
faces of America’s people are as multifaceted as the rays of colored light from a perfectly
formed diamond. The feet of America dance an exciting collage of movements and steps
that bear witness to her unique beauty and diversity. Her music is like the sea – full of
many wondrously beautiful things that have their own separate and individual identities.
However, when you place them together on a canvas, they make a marvelous painting.
From America’s beginning, when the first Anglos settled in Virginia in 1607, to the
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Pilgrims sailing in to Plymouth Rock, to the movement toward the unknown west of this
new land, to the first slave ships to dock at a busy port, America has been a melting pot
of humanity.
Let us see who we can discuss, who has in one body, some of that diversity. There is
one – Louis Gottschalk – the first American concert pianist. He was born to a mother
from Santo Domingo in the Caribbean and a father who was Jewish. He spent his
childhood in New Orleans among the Creoles. He was educated in Europe and became a
well-known concert pianist. He frequently visited the West Indies and preferred to speak
and write in French. He began the custom of playing his own compositions in concert
performances. He is best known for his piece Berceuse (Cradle Song). It was based on a
favorite French lullaby, “Fais dodo, mon bebe.” He later made it into a song that we
know as “Slumber On, Baby Dear.” This is a song that many mothers sing to their babies
as they lay them down to sleep. In today’s descriptions, Louis Gottschalk would be called
a recluse and an eccentric, for he was not one to abide by the rules that governed the
musicians of his day.
He traveled throughout most of what was then America as its most primitive.
However, he enjoyed many privileges that his fellow musicians did not have. He
composed whenever he wanted and he performed whenever and wherever he wanted. He
often performed only to pay his bills. He sometimes gave away or sold his music for very
cheap prices, only to see something that he had written being sold as the composition of
another composer. Louis Gottschalk was the embodiment of all that is America’s best.
America is unlike any other place in the world (Sadie, 1980).
TEXAS HISTORY
The Indians of Texas
Karankawa Indians
Texas stretches from the beautiful shores of the Gulf of Mexico, to the desert-like areas
that border the Rio Grande in the west, to the fertile farmland along the Trinity River in
the east, to the valleys that reach toward the Red River in the north. In each of these
areas, one can find that there is a fruit salad of ethnic groups, languages, dialects,
religious beliefs, cultural habits, fashions, foods, music and dance.
The year was 1528, when Alvar Nunez Cabeza de Vaca sailed his ship on the Gulf of
Mexico and was shipwrecked on the Texian Coast. Upon his reaching the shore, he wrote
that he saw only swampy marshland. As he and his men went further inland, they
encountered a group of people who were the Karankawa Indians. These tribal
communities had claimed all of the coastal area from Galveston Bay to the Nueces River.
Cabeza de Vaca saw that they lived in grass huts that were made of willow poles that
were bent to make an oval frame, whereupon they had placed grass mats that made them
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a home to use in the summer months. Sometimes, the men slept outside in the open air
because of the heat. During the winter months, the Indians would place animal skins over
the willow poles to give them some protection from the harsh winters. These Indians used
crushed oyster shells, covered with animal skins, to make mats that were used as beds
and places to sit. They used dug out trees to make canoes to travel up and down the many
bayous and rivers in that area (Chapman, 1997).
These were very tall people who were often more than six feet tall and some were
even seven feet tall. They presented a very frightening picture to these Spanish explorers.
Their ceremonial dance was called the mitote. It was a dance that centered around a stake
in the ground. Harsh sounding instruments were played to the pulsing accompaniment of
drums that were made of tortoise shells covered with skins. Another ceremony was the
fandango where they danced to the music played on a gourd filled with small stones fitted
with a fluted piece of wood. A slender piece of wood was drawn across it to produce a
droning sound. It was a haunting melody that they played and would have frightened the
men as they approached the Indians’ camp. They some times played a crude flute made
of reeds from the marsh. It was played in time with the chanting of the participants. Some
of the participants would whistle as the others chanted. The earliest music in the area we
know as Texas was the monophonic songs of the Indians (Ricklis, 1996).
Alabama-Coushatta Indians
The Alabama-Coushatta Indians are the largest tribal group in Texas today. The tribe
lives on the only reservation in Texas. It is located on Highway 190 East, just a few miles
from Livingston, Texas. After moving to this area from the Cahawba and Alabama
Rivers, they later became known as “Sam Houston’s Indians.” From their earliest
existence, the Alabamas and the Coushattas were two separate tribes. However, during
the exploration and settlement of Alabama, Louisiana and Texas, they were forced to
give up their lands and often traveled together. In 1854-55, the Alabamas were granted
lands in Polk County in a place just outside Livingston. They settled there after much
haggling with the government. The Coushattas petitioned for a land grant, which was
granted, but they never received the land. They became a homeless, wandering band of
people. After 1858, the two tribes began to live on the same land. Today, their beautiful
attire, lively dances accompanied by many voices of drums, rattles, shakers, ankle rattles
and hand drums mesmerize their audiences. Their voices sing the haunting melodies of
their ancestors (Newcomb, 1991).
Southern Caddoe Indians
The Southern Caddoe Indians of eastern Texas included the Hasinai Indians who were
also known as the Tejas. The name Tejas meant “friends” or allies and became the name
chosen for the area we call Texas. In 1689, the Spaniards opened the first mission in East
Texas, which was called San Francisco de los Tejas. This brought Christianity to the
Hasinai. They danced to ask God for a successful battle against their many enemies. The
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dances were conducted around a fire, where one person prompted them in what they
should ask as they prayed. The fire was continually burning one, which was a significant
part of their worship ceremony (Day, 1991).
Comanches
The Comanches lived along the San Saba River and first encountered the Spaniards at the
Spanish Mission, San Saba de la Cruz, in 1758. In 1860, Cynthia Parker was captured by
the Comanches and after being made the wife of Chief Peta Nacona, she gave birth to the
great Chief Quanah Parker. The history of Texas shows that he was a great warrior chief
for the Comanches. During their buffalo dance ceremonies, they danced and sang around
a center pole. They used clowns in the form of “mud men” as an interesting addition to
the dance. Each division of the tribe would dance and sing its favorite songs as the whole
group proceeded towards a ceremonial building on the land. They would then dance and
sing in unison. They used drums and rattles to sustain the rhythm and dancers blew on
whistles made of eagle’s bone.
In 1918, the Native American Church was chartered in Oklahoma. The Indians of
Texas adopted this religion in their ceremonies. They would participate in peyote worship
ceremonies. They sat on the ground in a circle around a fire. A drum made of skin which
was stretched over a kettle filled with water, played the sustaining rhythms and some of
the people played rattles. They also sang the songs of their ancestors as they worshiped.
The Comanches were the deadly enemies of the Karankawa Indians (Day, 1991).
The German Influence in Texas
The country of Germany has existed from even before the Middle Ages. During its great
musical history, there were the Minnesingers – a wandering band of singers. They sang
rural music of the peasant class. They also sang the religious music of the people who
tilled the soil and provided for their families with the skills of their hands and the sweat
of their brow. The Meistersingers were a guild of musicians. These musicians came from
the upper-class establishment, who were, for the most part, a very wealthy group of
people. Their guild was an exclusive one and the peasants could not gain entry into their
privileged world. The Germans were credited with constructing the first organ. The organ
was made during the ninth century. Singspiel was the German’s precursor to the opera of
the Italians. In 1791, Mozart performed his singspiel Die Zauberflote. Many of the
German citizens had pianos in their drawing rooms and entertained their guests with the
piano music of that day. Volksoper was a term used to describe a folk opera. It was the
precursor to the operetta. Johann Strauss (the younger) composed operettas (Sadie, 1980).
In 1853, the Germans in the San Antonio and Boerne Texas, area held bi-annual
singing festivals. In 1857, they imported German orchestras and singers to come to Texas
to entertain their townspeople. In 1894, Texas musicians formed and performed in the
orchestras. In 1845, the public schools of Galveston introduced music instruction. In the
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Texas area colleges and civic groups, the study of opera was strongly encouraged. In
1904, the city of San Antonio formed its own symphony orchestra. In 1911 the Dallas
Symphony Orchestra was formed. In 1928, church music conferences were encouraged to
perform sacred concerts and oratorios. In 1933, the Houston Symphony Orchestra was
formed. By 1949, there were more than thirty schools of music formed in the colleges of
Texas.
During this time, the area of Texas produced some outstanding musicians. One of
them was Olga Samaroff. She was from the San Antonio area. In 1882, she was regarded
to be a most outstanding pianist. Outstanding opera singers were Josephine Lucchese,
May Peterson Thompson, Rafaelo Diaz and Mack Harrell. In 1866 the first publishing
company was established, which was the company named Thomas Goggan and Brothers.
In the inaugural season of the Houston Symphony, compositions by Texas composers
were featured. In 1948, the Houston Symphony played an entire program of compositions
that were written by Texas-born composers. In 1958, the great Texas musician named
Van Cliburn won the Tchaikovsky Piano Competition in Moscow.
The first resident opera company was established in San Antonio, Texas in 1945. The
conductor was Maestro Max Reiter. They performed the opera La Boheme. In 1946, the
Fort Worth Opera Association established a resident opera group and they performed La
Traviata. In 1956, the Houston Grand Opera formed a resident opera company and their
first performance was Salome. In 1987, Houston Grand Opera moved out of the beautiful
Jones Hall and took up residence in the magnificently appointed Wortham Theatre Center
(Tyler, 1996).
The African American Musicians of Texas
Among the finest of baritone voices was the voice of Jules Bledsoe. He was born in 1898
in Waco, Texas. He sang in the children’s chorus and sang his first solo at the age of five,
at the New Hope Baptist Church in Waco. He studied at the college in Marshall and at
many other colleges in Texas. He traveled extensively and decided to become a doctor.
However, music was the focal point of his life and he received numerous degrees in
music from colleges in the eastern United States. He was singing a concert of spirituals
when he was asked to sing in the premiere of Jerome Kern’s opera Showboat. The year
was 1927 when his big, warm, baritone voice rolled out the immortal melody of “Old
Man River.” The kid from the cowboy town of Waco had made it to Broadway in New
York. He sang many roles in many operas. He was also known for his performances in
musical comedy and he was widely hailed for his concert singing. He was a musician
with varied talents. He played piano, composed many pieces and even starred in the films
of Hollywood. In 1924, he sang in his concert debut at Aeolian Hass in New York. In
1934, he sang the title role in Louis Gruenberg’s Emperor Jones. He sang Tonio in
Pagliacci, Amonasro in Aida, and Mephisto in Faust. He was only 45 years old when he
was found dead in his apartment in Hollywood, California.
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In the 1920s, Roberta Dodd Crawford was regarded a star in the music world. She
was born in Bonham, Texas. She went on to become a great star on the stages of the
United States and of the halls in Europe. However, when she was asked to present a
concert in the city of her birth, her family was not allowed to sit in the seats on the main
floor. They were forced to sit in the segregated section, in the balcony. She was the diva
of the halls in Europe, and spent most of her adult life there singing in concerts.
Scott Joplin was born in 1868 in Texarkana, Texas. He came from a musical family.
His mother played the banjo and his father played the fiddle. At the age of seven, he
taught himself to play the piano. At age eleven, he was allowed to take piano lessons
from the local German music teacher. This teacher gave him a firm foundation in the
piano, playing classical music. He ran away from home when he was fourteen. During his
time away from home, he played in saloons, bars and honky-tonks. He played in a saloon
called the Maple Leaf and he composed the ragtime piece entitled “Maple Leaf Rag.” In
1909, he began to compose an opera. This was unheard of for a man of his color.
However, in 1911 he finished his opera and named it Treemonisha. He was living at that
time in New York. In June of 1975, the Houston Grand Opera presented a grand premiere
of Scott Joplin’s opera Treemonisha. This was a lavishly done, professional performance,
which was well received by the audience in Jones Hall. In September of 1975, the opera
was presented on Broadway in New York. Houston performed the opera to rousing
applause two more times after its opening on Broadway (Sance, 1987).
HOUSTON: THE BRIGHTEST, GRANDEST AND BEST OF STARS OF TEXAS
Houston, the fourth largest city in the United States, was built on top of seven geological
faults. It can be compared to the many pieces of a beautiful quilt. Each piece is a part of a
garment that was worn in the past and which holds pleasant memories. Memories are too
precious to forget or to toss away. In Houston, one can revisit the days of the lives of the
cowboys when we enjoy the dangerous trick riding, the stunts and the competitions
during the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo. During most of the year, one can become
enlightened about various Indian tribal languages, dress, and dances through the many
Heritage Council seminars and workshops. One can walk through the shopping centers
and eat at restaurants that are exclusive to the Asian cultures of the world. One can buy
fresh fruits and vegetables, spices, clothing, furniture and other commodities from far
Latin American countries, and from our neighbor to the west – Mexico. One can marvel
at the colors woven into the intricate patterns in the clothing worn by the people from
many countries in Africa. We can hear the African rhythms pulsating through the park
during the Pan African Festival. One can hear the haunting melodies of the bagpipes from
Scotland, and move to the heavenly music of flutes from Ireland. One can visit places of
worship and be transferred to the cathedrals that are along the Rhine River. One can be
captivated by the ancient worship services of the Greeks and the Romans.
One of the earliest recorded residents of this city so far inland from the island of
Galveston was Jan Wilkins, who supposedly left Galveston and traveled westward to a
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place on Buffalo Bayou. She came in 1823, but only lived there for one year. She left the
area in 1824. One can only suppose that she left because of the fierce Indians who had
always lived in this area. Later, John D. Taylor moved inland to a place we call Piney
Point. This area is in the Spring Branch part of Houston. He will have a great impact on
the settling and founding of Houston after his premature death. Robert Wilson was the
first European to settle in the area known as Clear Lake. John Austin was a land
colonizer. The country of Mexico granted him the territory bounded in the north, from the
Camino Real (King’s Road) in Natchitoches, Louisiana to the area of San Antonio. His
parcel also included the La Vaca River in the west to Chocolate Bayou in the east, and to
the Gulf of Mexico in the south. In 1824, he was granted the land, which included
Buffalo Bayou all the way to the San Jacinto River. His colonies were only temporary
ones because of the swampy marshland. This type of land was unfamiliar to these groups
of peoples who had transferred from another land. Because of the awful, hot summers,
the terrible infestation bugs, and other marsh creatures that lived in the swamps, the
settlers sought new land.
In the year 1832, two brothers came to this area from New York. They were Augustus
Chapman Allen and John Kirby Allen. They saw an extremely green land with a
semitropical climate. They found the winters to be mild and short, the summers to be hot,
with very high humidity. The soil was unlike any that they had ever seen. This soil was
unpredictable and very much likened to quicksand; only this soil could move and cause
great shifting of even their temporary buildings (Chapman, 1997).
The Allen brothers purchased the south half of the land by Buffalo Bayou, from
Elizabeth Parrott who was the wife of T. F. L. Parrott. She was also the widow of John
Austin, the land colonizer. They paid $5,000 for the property in 1836 (McComb, 1981).
They felt that the bayou, which runs from the west to the east, would be good for water
transport of goods from the Brazos River to Galveston Bay. There are many legends
about how this new city was named. The most popular legend is that Charlotte Allen was
the hostess at a dinner that was held at her home where the triumphant General Sam
Houston, hero of the Battle of San Jacinto, sat at the head of the table. She supposedly
told all that were present that she had the great honor to name this new city Houston after
the victorious General Houston.
From 1836 to 1875, Houston enjoyed the influx of many German immigrants. This
era brought about great intellectual and cultural development. In 1838, Henri Corri
presented the first-ever public play in the Texas area. It was a comedy written by
Sheridan Knowles entitled The Hunchback and the Dumb Belle or I’m Perfection. This
play included the song “A New National Texian Anthem.” In the year 1854, German
immigrants founded the Houston Turnverein, which stressed gymnastics and music. They
also organized social events for the community. In 1857, Houston had music teachers and
dance teachers who were of German descent.
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Houston has enjoyed at least four different growth patterns: the frontier life of 1836 to
1875; the era of transition from 1876 to 1930; the time of great population growth from
1930 to 1980; and the fourth one is the present age of Houston’s emergence as the
incomparable pioneer in space exploration, leader in the world of sports and lastly, the
shining star in the wonderful world of music and fine arts.
Houston’s musical past included the forming of its first serious music club, the
Philharmonic, from which many other musical clubs grew. These clubs were exclusively
for the German immigrants to the city of Houston. They founded the Houston
Saengerbund from which was later founded the State Saengerfest. Anton Diehl founded
the Houston Quartette (Albecht, 1980). In 1887, the Third Ward Euchre Club was
formed. This was a club that was for the delight of those Germans who liked to play table
or parlor games, using playing cards and the like. The Z. Z. Club was founded in the year
1858 and was the oldest and strongest social organization in the state of Texas. The
handsome and socially polished Spencer Hutchins founded this club. He was deemed a
most beautiful dancer. The club members were experts in the round dances. These were
the waltzes and polkas (Albecht, 1980). The Germans could be seen on many Sunday
afternoons, listening to concerts in City Park. Today, this area is called Sam Houston
Park and houses some of the historical houses from Houston’s past. The people sat on
benches and watched the brass bands play from inside of the big, white gazebo
(McComb, 1981).
The polka is defined as a ballroom dance, which was very popular in the early
nineteenth century. It was originally a peasant round dance from Bohemia. Bohemia
encompasses most of Central and Eastern Europe. The polka is a lively dance for a
couple, that is set in 2/4 time. It can be played moderately fast. It is in ternary form. It is
characterized by its short rapid steps, for the first beat and a half of the bar, which are
followed by a pause or a little hop. The polka française is very much the same as the
polka, except that it is somewhat slower, and it is danced with movements that are more
graceful. The polka mazurka is set in 3/4 time. It was very popular in Central and Eastern
Europe. Johann Strauss, both father and son, wrote music which was used for this type of
dance. Polka bands enjoyed much fame in the city. The bands featured the piano, the
accordion and the clarinet. The music is set in three movements. Two of the movements
are based on the tonic and the third is based on the dominant.
Another group from the area of Germany were the Wends. These were a group of
people who were called Sorbs in Europe, and they were accustomed to hard work,
oppression and endurance in their lives. They were the descendants of the Slavic tribes
from the greater part of Central Europe. They were often discriminated against and they
could not own land in their own homeland. They were never an independent nation. The
German citizens denied them the opportunity to join guilds and the societies of their
country. Therefore, in the 1850s, they decided to leave their country, for a better place.
They were determined to move to the New World – America. These people of the
Lutheran faith persuaded the spiritual leader, Reverend Jan Killian, to lead them and to
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organize their departure from Germany. In 1854, they sailed away and eventually arrived
in Galveston in December of that year. After traveling by foot over inhospitable land,
they arrived at their destination. They settled along the banks of Rabb Creek near the
town of Giddings. They bought land and built log cabins for shelter. These people who
were transferred from another country are credited with organizing the first Wendish
Lutheran church.
African American Music in Houston
African Americans arrived in this area with the first European exploration. Some had
been here for some time when the Europeans began to settle here. Eight hundred years
before the Europeans first explored the Texas coast, the Arab-Berber “moors” of North
Africa conquered Spain and ruled for almost eight centuries, until early in 1492, when
they were overthrown. During those eight centuries, the Moors traded slaves for goods in
Europe. Slaves often accompanied the Europeans on their exploration in the New World,
as free blacks. They were the navigators, soldiers, merchants and artisans. Many were left
here by the Spanish and married into the Indian tribes. Esteban was the first black man to
probe the region north of the Rio Grande. In 1528, he went ashore on Galveston Island
with Alvar Nunez Cabeza de Vaca. Esteban had a gift for speaking languages different
from his own and soon was able to converse with the Indians. Esteban was born in
Azemour, Morocco. He became a medicine man for the Indians. He brought with him the
music of his ancestors and taught the Indians songs from his own world far away from
these shores.
Slaves were brought to this area on slave ships, which docked in the bay at Galveston.
They were transported to all points in Texas. The Anglos who owned them taught the
slaves religious songs. Folk spirituals were the songs of the slaves that were passed from
generation to generation. These were the slave’s own version of the hymns that the
Spanish missionaries and other Anglos taught them. There was always the African
influence in the music that they sang. There were whoops and hollers from West Africa
and songs with a political message from South Africa.
The slaves sang as they worked. In my talks with my great-great grandmother Alcy
Wheat, she said that “singing made the work go faster.” There were songs that had a
steady walking rhythm that could be used for planting, and there was a song with a
rocking rhythm for pulling cotton. There was another song with a syncopated rhythm for
chopping cotton. Then there were the songs that were used to send a message to the
slaves. These songs would be sung with intricately woven descriptions of places to go,
when to go there and warnings about dangers along the way. “Get You Ready, There’s a
Meeting Here Tonight” called the slaves together for discussions about some important
matter. “Down By the River-Side” would tell one where to go. “You Better Be Ready”
told one to look out for dangers along the way. “Walk in Jerusalem” told you where you
were going, and it did not mean the city in Israel, it meant the cities “up north.”
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After freedom, the people in the Houston area moved to what was called Freedman’s
Town – Fourth Ward. They were allowed to work and buy property there and to form
their own independent communities. They worshiped in an area called the Brush Arbor.
This was a forest area that could provide shelter from the elements and protection from
any unwanted people. They had very lively worship services. There was the singing of
some lined hymns, where an appointed person would start the verse of a hymn and the
people joined in with very long phrases that had many inflections on the melody. There
would be praying which was long and extemporaneous, using very descriptive words.
There would be a preacher, who was the most revered person in the community. The
preacher would speak first in quiet tones that calmed everyone down and as he went
further in his delivery, he would cause his voice to rise and fall, each time getting louder
and louder. Somewhere in his sermon, he would invite the people to “help him out.” The
people would then begin to shout words of encouragement. Horace Boyer states that it
was often difficult to hear the words of the preacher, because of all of the noise from the
congregation.
The preacher would continue until he reached a very dramatic and joyful end.
Afterwards, he would invite others to join the church. Dancing was not permitted in the
church, unless it was “holy dancing.” Holy dancing was achieved by shuffling the feet
instead of raising them up as you moved. The shoulders should not move unless they
moved in an upward motion. The hips were definitely not allowed to move, since that
would be dancing like the folks who were of the “debbil” (Boyer, 2001). The ring shout
was where the older people sat in chairs in the front of the church and tapped their feet or
tapped their canes in time to the music. The younger ones would sing spirited songs as
they circled around them, moving and swaying to the rhythm of the music. (This type of
shuffling of the feet can be seen in the old line dance of the funeral marchers in New
Orleans as they go on their way to the cemetery.)
Houston has many organizations that carry on the traditions of the spirituals. The
Houston Ebony Opera Guild Chorus has generated quite a wonderful annual concert
season of performing traditional and contemporary spirituals. Founded in 1986 by Dr.
Robert A. Henry, retired Professor of Music at Prairie View A&M University, the chorus
is comprised of professional singers from the Houston metropolitan area. Many of these
singers are former students of his. Following the demise of Dr. Henry, Maestro Willie,
music director of Connecticut Opera, became the music director of Ebony Opera Chorus.
The artistic director is Roland Carter – director of music at Tennessee State University,
and a magnificent composer. The chorus enjoys having Moses Hogan, director of choirs
at Xavier University in New Orleans, as one of its music advisors and conductors during
its concert season. Trinity United Methodist Church, Pleasant Hill Baptist Church,
Pilgrim Congregational Church and Clear Lake Presbyterian Church all have an annual
spirituals concert season. The University Chorus of Prairie View A&M University
continues to keep the tradition of singing spirituals on their concert tours.
12
Houston is fortunate to have many African American composers living in the city.
Calvin Fuller, chorus master of Houston Ebony Opera and choral music teacher at Sam
Houston High School, composes contemporary religious music. He often uses dissonant
tonalities with polyrhythmic lines. He is also a noted pianist and organist, and he
composes quite difficult accompaniments to his pieces that sometimes test the best of
pianists. Lela Anderson, piano instructor at Burrus Elementary, composes and arranges
spirituals, introits and piano pieces. She is a phenomenal pianist, who performs regularly
throughout the Houston area and the United States. Her music has been published by
Hinshaw Music Publishers and many noted soloists and choirs around the United States
have recorded her spirituals. Hope Shiver, a marvelous soprano, has sung with Houston
Grand Opera for many years. She has traveled extensively, giving concerts and
performing with various opera companies. She is a dancer, actor, arranger, and composer
of children’s opera. She has traveled to many of the major opera houses in Europe and
Asia performing in Gershwin’s Porgy and Bess. She spends her time in Houston teaching
private lessons and performing in Young Audiences, a non-profit arts-in-education
organization, with her husband and daughter. The Sandra Organ Dance Company,
founded and choreographed by Sandra Organ, performs classical ballet with
contemporary orchestration accompaniment. The group often incorporates modern
technology in their dance scenes. The dancers frequently include a choreographed
spiritual in their performances.
Just spin the globe around on its imaginary axis, and stop on any country; then take
the yellow pages, and you will find a place in Houston that represents that culture. It can
be said that Houston is a gumbo pot of humanity, with many diverse groupings of people,
colors, languages and musical traditions. This resource guide should help the students of
Houston to listen to the rhythms and voices of the people who represent many countries
in the world. They may decide to dance the spirit-filled steps of some of the traditional
folk dances of their peers. The classrooms of Houston are a true reflection of the diversity
of Houston’s population.
THE DIVERSE POPULATION OF A HOUSTON HIGH SCHOOL
The faculty and staff of Kashmere High School and the Conrad O. Johnson School of
Music and Fine Arts, where I teach, is a photo shot of Houston’s diversity. It consists of
people who are descendants of people from Panama, Nigeria, Hungary, Lebanon, Israel,
Puerto Rico and Central America. There are many who are the descendants of American
Indians and African American slaves. The student population is just as diverse. There are
students who are descendants of people from Nigeria, Mexico, Central America, the
Philippines, Puerto Rico and those of Cajun/Creole heritage. There are many who are the
descendants of African American slaves and American Indians. Kashmere is a veritable
smorgasbord of ethnic groups and mixtures.
13
In my classroom, the population of students runs the full gamut of ability groupings. I
have students who are classified as language learning deficient, speech impaired, mildly
autistic, mildly mentally challenged and dyslexic. Others are average to above average
mentally and gifted intellectually. Some are musically gifted in vocal music and
instrumental music. Some are gifted in dance and in the visual arts. My students include
those from the lower, middle and upper middle class economic groupings. The parents of
my students range from those with little formal education to those who post graduate
degrees and technological training and beyond. I have some students who live with foster
parents, some who were adopted and some who have lived in homeless shelters and
abandoned children shelters. Some are from single parent homes, and others live with
both parents and extended families.
My music theory and history classes enjoy learning how and why we use the signs
and symbols in music composition. They are always interested in learning how all of
these things fit together in the historical realm of man’s existence. They marvel at the
instrumentation of yesterday and the groups that performed them or the people who
composed them. They compare and contrast those traditions with the traditions of today.
When it comes to teaching choral music, my motto is “if you can talk, then you can sing.”
I find that it works well to have a positive mind and attitude about students and their
abilities. That positive attitude becomes an infectious one. I advise my students to never
compare your singing abilities to others and try not to sing “like” someone else. With so
many ethnic groupings in my classes, I try to blend all of the voices into a pleasant sound
that will be pleasing to our audiences. My choir enjoys singing music in various
languages such as German, French, Swahili, Yoruba, Latin, Spanish and Old English.
Since Houston is a veritable melting pot, we often encounter someone who appreciates
hearing his or her own language or a favorite song in a place so far away from home.
Once, a man from Jewish parentage heard us sing “Hava Nagilah” and came to us to
express his appreciation for hearing something with which he was familiar.
The information in this guide can be spread out over the year and used in
interdisciplinary lessons with the history, math, science, foreign language and other fine
arts teachers. The teachers should guide the students through the lessons, which are
meant to instruct as well as entertain. I hope to tweak some students’ curiosity about the
people in their community. The students should be allowed to form lessons on their own
and present them to their peers. They should be led to understand that a community is
interwoven with many people, and it is a beautiful place in which to live. The students
should see that their school is a very diverse one and that within its perimeters lies a
community dependent upon the combined collaboration and cooperation of each member.
14
ACTIVITIES
Activity One: Texian History Map
Materials Needed
History of Texas reference books, paper for mapping, tools for calculating distances,
information about longitude and latitude, colored pencils and a vivid imagination.
Objectives
To give students a perspective about the past and the problems in reaching the shores of
this new land; to show the relationship between territorial boundaries.
Student’s Assessment
Compare and contrast the individual’s map with maps by professional mapmakers.
Assign yourself a grade.
Teacher’s Assessment
Compare and contrast the students’ maps with those of a professional and check for
attempt at accuracy. Perhaps the student has a future in the field of mapmaking.
Activity Two: Our School Population
Materials Needed
Information about the ethnic population in the school.
Objectives
To allow a student the opportunity to get to know the other students, who they see every
day. To allow the student to appreciate and understand the differences and similarities
between themselves and others.
Student’s Assessment
Consider taking an objective poll from the students in each class and see if you have
accurately represented each division. Have another student assess your work. Consider
using this as a math project for extra credit.
Teacher’s Assessment
Consider accepting this as an addition to the class work in probabilities or percentages.
Consider using this as an addition to the lessons on averaging.
Activity Three: The Performance Community in Houston
Materials Needed
Tickets to an amateur or professional performance; student-constructed rating sheet.
15
Objectives
To allow the student to participate in gaining good audience habits; to allow the student
to hear a performance of others who are not in their school; to generate appreciation of
the arts.
Student’s Assessment
Compare your rating sheet of the performance with that of a professional critic; assign
yourself points for every similar statement or observation.
Teacher’s Assessment
Rate the students’ understanding of the performance by their knowledge of the meanings
of the words or the actions on the stage.
Activity Four: American Composers
Materials Needed
Music reference books.
Objectives
To generate information of composers of a certain time in history; to compare and
contrast events that occurred in the lives of the composers with events in the fields of
architecture, science, math, et cetera.
Student’s Assessment
Grade yourself on the quality of information you have gathered. What can be learned
from the information you have gathered? How can you apply it to your own life?
Teacher’s Assessment
Assign grade points for accuracy and quality of information.
Activity Five: The Indians of Texas
Materials Needed
Information about the instruments of the Texas Indians; reference books pertaining to the
music traditions of the Indians.
Objectivities
To generate an understanding of how the instruments of today come to be; to foster
curiosity about the manufacturing and care of instruments; to allow for gathering
information about the evolution of the families of instruments.
16
Student’s Assessment
Make an instrument using the same or similar materials; perform a piece on the
instrument; assign yourself points for making an instrument that works;
Teacher’s Assessment
Assign points for accuracy and for performance quality.
Activity Six: The Folk Dances of Texas
Materials Needed
Music of a chosen dance; reference books with instructions on the dance; space for
dancing.
Objectives
To participate in the folk dance of one’s ancestors; to foster graceful movement; to
generate the ability to dance an unfamiliar step with confidence.
Student’s Assessment
Assign points for your agility; assign points for the dance being worthy of an audience.
Teacher’s Assessment
Assign points for agility and grace; assign points for memory of the steps; assign points
for the dance being worthy of an audience.
17
ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY
Albecht, Theodore John. German Singing Societies in Texas. Ann Arbor, Mich.:
University Microfilms, 1980.
This book discusses the immigrant Germans and their founding of musical guilds and
societies. The pictures are not very clear however.
Burlin, Natalie Curtis. Negro Folk Songs: The Hampton Series Book I-IV, Complete. New
York: Dover, 2001.
This book has examples of spirituals and other songs that were sung in the daily lives
of the Negro and it gives the historical background for each.
–––––. The Indian’s Book – An Offering by the American Indians of Indian Lore, Musical
and Narrative to Form a Recording of the Songs and Legends of Their Race. New
York: Dover, 1968.
This book gives the historical accounts of American Indian tribes and gives examples
of some of their songs.
Chapman, Betty Trapp. Historic Houston – An Illustrated History and Resource Guide.
Houston, Tex.: Greater Houston Preservation Alliance, 1997.
This book tells the history of Houston in pictures and maps.
Cotton, Marian. Music throughout the World. New York: Summy Birchard, 1960.
This book discusses the music of many countries.
Courlander, Harold. Negro Folk Music. New York: Columbia University Press, 1963.
This book discusses various forms of Negro folk music including ballads, blues,
spirituals, work songs, and game songs.
Day James. Indian Tribes of Texas. 4th ed. Waco, Tex.: Texian Press, 1991.
This book discusses tribes of Texas and gives information about the wars they
fought.
Ewen, David. Orchestral Music; Its Story Told through the Lives and Works of Its
Foremost Composers. New York: F. Watts, 1973.
This book traces the history of the orchestra and tells about composers and their
works from the sixteenth century until today.
Haskins, James. Black Music in America: A History through Its People. New York: T.Y.
Crowell, 1987.
This book discusses the history of black music in America, from slave songs to jazz,
blues and soul. It even includes classical music.
18
Latham, Alison, ed. Oxford Companion to Music. New York: Oxford Press, 2002.
This book provides information about composers and musical terms.
Lornell, Kip. Introducing American Folk Music: Ethnic and Grassroots Traditions in the
United States. 2nd ed. New York: McGraw-Hill, 2002.
This book discusses folk music of America and Native American folk traditions.
Luttrell, Guy L. The Instruments of Music. Nashville, Tenn.: T. Nelson, 1977.
This book describes the human voice, the orchestral instruments and folk instruments
of America, and how to create electronic music.
McComb, David G. Houston – A History. Austin, Tex.: University of Texas, 1981.
This book re-examines Houston’s politics, economic and business growth and the
evolution of its social and cultural institutions.
Miller, Ray. Ray Miller’s Galveston. 2nd ed. Houston, Tex.: Gulf Publishing Co., 1993.
This book tells the history of Galveston and the mainland and includes pictures of
some of the historical places.
Nettl, Bruno, ed. Ethnomusicology. Champaign, Ill.: University of Illinois Press, 1983.
This journal publishes original articles in the field of ethnomusicology, three times a
year, and gives much insight for the novice concerning the study of ethnic music.
–––––. Excursions in World Music. 3rd ed. Upper Saddle River, N.J.: Prentice Hall,
2001.
This book talks about the musical traditions of many countries of the world.
Newcomb, W.W., Jr. Indian Tribes of Texas. 4th ed. Waco, Tex.: Texian Press, 1991.
This book discusses eight of the larger tribes of Indians who lived in the area called
Texas.
Onovwerosuoke, Fred. “Contemplating African Choral Music: Insights for Non-
Indigenes and Foreign Conductors.” In Choral Journal (May 2002): 9.
A most interesting article about African choral music.
Otfinoski, Steven. Scott Joplin: A Life in Ragtime. New York: Incorporated Franklin
Watts, 1995.
This book tells the story of Scott Joplin’s life as one of the most famous composers
of ragtime music.
Paymer, Marvin E. Facts behind the Songs – A Book of American Popular Music from
the Nineties to the 90s. New York: Garland Publishing, 1993.
This book shows the musical scores for many of the nation’s popular songs.
19
Ricklis, Robert A. The Karankawa Indians of Texas – An Ecological Study of Cultural
Traditions and Change. Austin, Tex.: University of Texas, 1996.
This book takes one on a dig in the Galveston and surrounding area and shows some
of the finds of the team. There is also information about the vegetation in that area.
Sadie, Stanley, ed. The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians. New York,
Macmillan, 1980.
This book is invaluable for finding information about composers and musicians.
Salinas, Martin. Indians of the Rio Grande Delta – Their role in the History of Southern
Texas and Northeastern Mexico. Austin, Tex.: University of Texas, 1990.
This book discusses the culture and traditions of these Native Americans with maps
and agricultural information.
Sance, Melvin M., Jr. Afro-American Texas. San Antonio, Tex.: University of Texas,
1987.
This book gives one historical information about the African Americans who settled
in Texas, their cultures and traditions.
Spaeth, Jeanne, ed. Music Educators Journal. Reston, Va.: Music Educators National
Conference.
The official magazine of Music Educators National Conference (MENC). This
journal publishes articles pertaining to the teaching of music and it also publishes
related educational work in the music field.
Tyler, Ron. The New Handbook of Texas, Vol. 4. Austin, Tex.: State Historical
Association, 1996.
This book tells about the history of Texas and the people who settled the land.
–––––. The New Handbook of Texas, Vol. 6. Austin, Tex.: State Historical Association,
1987.
This book tells about the history of the founding of Houston. There is a map made in
1873 showing the layout of Houston.
Discography
Ad Zido Pan African Dance Ensemble. Ad Zido. ARC Music.
This is a vibrantly lively recording of the whoops and drums of the music of South
Africa.
Boyer, Horace and the Year of Jubilee 3. It’s My Desire. CLEMB Productions, 2001.
This CD has 11 songs sung by a quartet which includes the author and some of his
original compositions and arrangements. He is also playing the accompaniment.
20
Conrad, Barbara. Spirituals. HNH International 8.553036, 1995.
This CD has is marvelous as she sings traditional and contemporary spirituals.
De Wheel, Ezekiel Saw. A Collection of Spirituals Arranged by Moses Hogan. MGH
7000.
This CD has spirituals arranged by Moses Hogan and sung by the Moses Hogan
Chorale.
Hogarth, Robin. The Best of Today’s African Folk Music. Vol. 2. Reamusic Music
Agency Clear Music Arc. Music EUCD 1314, 1995.
This ED provides one with folk stories that are told in music with religious tones and
some with political themes.
Jackson, Mahalia. Amazing Grace. MCA Records. MCAD 20489, 1988.
This CD has some of the favorite traditional spirituals sung in the unique manner of
Ms. Jackson.
Oktoberfest. Intersound CDM 4003, 1990.
This CD has some lovely Bavarian Oktoberfest Band and choir music. It includes
polkas, marches and waltzes.
Sacred Spirits. Virgin Records, 1994.
This CD has some beautiful songs of Native American music.
Sounds of Blackness. Africa to America: The Journey of the Drum. Perspective/A & M
31454-9006-2, 1994.
This CD has contemporary spirituals, work songs, and message songs with African
drumming.
Yoruba Drums from Benin, West Africa. Smithsonian/Folkways SFA0440, 1996.
Internet Resources
http://www.pitts.emory.edu/theoarts/multi.htm#repres
Multicultural and International Choral Music
Contains links to Native American music repertoire and resources.
http://www.theorganmag.com/news/news-119_international_society_.htm
International Society - African to America Music
www.angelfire.com/tx2/ecc/karankawa.html
The Coastal Indians of Texas
21
www.floridahistory.com/texas.html
Texas and Louisiana Trails
www.kikipoo.com/Indians/karankawa/start.htm
The Karankawa Indians
Special Recognitions
Houston Independent School District
Project CLEAR
Fine Arts Curriculum
Texas Southern University
Symposium on African American Church Music: An Examination of a Variety of Styles,
Quality and Trends featuring Horace Boyer, Ph.D.
Remembered discussions with my great-great grandmother, Mrs. Alcy Adams Wheat.